Abramowitz, Eliyahu
Son of Asia and Mark. He was born on December 3, 1918 in Russia, and after his parents separated he moved with his mother to Berlin where he studied in an elementary school and a high school named after Karl Marx. “When the Nazis came to power, the financial situation of the family worsened and at the recommendation of his mother and in Darabona he joined a Jewish youth group that was supposed to go to agricultural training in Denmark. As a result, the German authorities refused to give the youth company exit permits In September 1933 at the Schocken family estate in Winkel, where conditions were difficult and elementary conditions were lacking: the students spent half a day doing agricultural work, and in the remaining half of the day they learned Hebrew, knowledge of the country and Israeli history. It began about the end of the camp. “In January 1934, the youth movement left Germany, arrived in Eretz Israel and became the first youth group to join the kibbutz in Kibbutz Ein Harod, the first of its members to read and write Hebrew. He was discovered as a talented young man whose truth and social ethics were his guiding light, and he was interested in various issues related to society’s problems and values, from reading books to various natural phenomena, his thoughts and thoughts on a diary that he began to write in Germany and in writing in Israel. The hachshara in Ein Harod moved with his friends to settle in Shikh Avri Eliahu joined the Haganah and during the 1936-1939 riots he was involved in securing workers who went to work at the JNF plantation around the kibbutz and asked for permission from the kibbutz to go to a teacher training seminary in Jerusalem so that he could contribute more to the cultural life of the kibbutz and his last days were devoted to preparation The three of them boarded a mine that had been planted on the way, and Eliyahu was killed on the spot and was brought with his friends to the cemetery in Kibbutz Alonim. In his memory and excerpts from his diary are found in “Aliyat Hanoar” book and in the booklet “The Israelite deer on your stage a space” that was published by Kibbutz Alonim in memory of its fallen.